SWTBot is a Java-based functional testing tool for
testing SWT and Eclipse based applications. It
provides APIs that are simple to read and write
and hide the complexities involved with SWT and
Eclipse. This makes it suitable for functional
testing by everyone. A set of assertions that are
useful for SWT are provided, and you can also use
your own assertion framework. A recorder and
driver are provided for recording and playing back
tests along with Ant tasks so that you can run
your builds from within CruiseControl or other CI
tools.

Flex Maven Reports includes various Maven reports for projects written with the Adobe Flex Framework. The current reports are the RemoteObject Maven Report, which show details about remote objects used in an application and generates a graphical view of them, and the Actionscript UML report, which shows UML diagrams of the classes.

DKPro WSD provides UIMA components which encapsulate corpus readers, linguistic annotators, lexical semantic resources, WSD algorithms, and evaluation and reporting tools. You configure the components, or write new ones, and arrange them into a data processing pipeline. DKPro WSD is modular and flexible. Components which provide the same functionality can be freely swapped. You can easily run the same algorithm on different data sets, or test several different algorithms on the same data set.

Java Nagios Remote Plugin Executor is a
replacement for the NRPE Server for Nagios. It can
execute local and remote JAVA check plugins
without the overhead of a JVM instance for every
Nagios JAVA plugin. It is compatible with check_nrpe.

apub is a tool to simplify uploading documents of
a site to remote servers. Simply create an XML
configuration file containing one or more site
definitions, with the local and remote document
root. After that, you can upload any file in any
of your document roots with one simple command.

OpenOLAT is a learning management system used by universities, schools, and companies to deliver e-learning content, to do testing and assessment, and to work collaboratively in various learning scenarios.

Augmented Syntax Diagrams (ASDs) provide a way to
represent grammars of natural languages as
directed graphs. Nodes represent instances (or
usages) of words and phrase types in a language
such as English. Edges link nodes together to
indicate how instances of words and phrase types
can follow one another to make up phrases,
clauses, and sentences in the language.